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World History

World History. The Renaissance and Exploration (15:1). Leonardo da Vinci. The journals of Leonardo Obsessed with learning and new ideas Knew man was not restricted to the ground You can never bring back the past, you can only channel it to make going forward easier. The Renaissance.

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World History

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  1. World History The Renaissance and Exploration (15:1)

  2. Leonardo da Vinci • The journals of Leonardo • Obsessed with learning and new ideas • Knew man was not restricted to the ground • You can never bring back the past, you can only channel it to make going forward easier

  3. The Renaissance • The “rebirth” • A time of creativity • A new view of the world • On the cusp of achieving great things • Art and intellectualism flourished

  4. A long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away… • Where is the world coming from? • What is still going on? • 100 Years War • Just coming out of the Middle Ages • Black Death • Political Revolution • New Weaponry

  5. Italy Offered New Opportunities • The Renaissance began in northern Italy • Why?

  6. New Opportunities • Reason #1: • Economically thriving urban centers • Genoa, Venice, Florence • Northern Italy was ahead of its time (urban)

  7. New Opportunities • Reason #2 • Northern Italy was dominated by merchants and wealth • The city-states ran their own affairs • Merchants were the wealthiest and most powerful people • Merchants did not inherit their social rank • Most importantly, their support for the arts

  8. New Opportunities • Merchants fought for sponsorships • They wanted to sponsor the most skilled artists, writers, etc. • This enabled artists and intellectuals to concentrate on their craft

  9. 3 of the early geniuses: • Giotto – painted frescoes • Painting on wet plaster • Commissioned to paint • Giotto began a revolution in art • Had a grasp on emotion, not anatomy • People interacted in his paintings • Short and homely

  10. Giotto • “The Mourning of Christ” • Best known for his works depicting Saint Francis of Assissi • Known for the marks of stigmata

  11. Giotto: • “I am he through whose merit the lost art of painting was revived…but what need is there for words? I am Giotto, and my name alone tells more than a lengthy ode.” • Commonplace Renaissance imaging in the celebration of the individual

  12. Early Genius #2 • Dante Alighieri • Met his muse at age 9 (Beatrice) – then didn’t see her again for 10 years • “From that time forward, love quite governed my soul” Dante, speaking of his meeting with Beatrice • She died at 24 – Dante’s infatuation continued

  13. The Divine Comedy • Part 1 – Gets a tour of Hell from Virgil • Dante’s Inferno • Part 2 – Dante and Virgil visit purgatory • What is purgatory? • Part 3 – Guided through paradise by St. Bernard, a medieval monk, and meets Beatrice • What happens to Virgil?

  14. The Divine Comedy • A running commentary on the events of his friends and politics • A philosophic bridge between Europe’s past and its future • Didn’t write in Latin • Wrote it in vernacular • The everyday language of ones homeland, considered now to be the father of modern Italian and greatly influenced others to write in vernacular

  15. Early Genius #3 • Petrarch • A great poet • Had a muse named Laura • Very mysterious lady who died of the plague • Wrote many letters as well to influential people, friends, and a combination of the two

  16. Petrarch • Often imitated Cicero (Ancient Roman Senator) – a personal literary hero of Petrarch • Crossed Dante’s bridge of old to new • Left the classical, complex styling • A contemporary of his time

  17. Petrarch • Laura • Married to another man • Petrarch was denied each time he pursued her • Wrote prolifically about her, letters and poems showing his intense feelings • Slipped into a depression when she died • Fathered the Renaissance • Combined religion and humanism

  18. New Values • Celebration of the individual • Artists and intellectuals were now noted, and remembered for their works • They used to do it solely to glorify God • Fame became the final reward for superior talent • Still true today? Right or wrong?

  19. New Values • Two new art forms evolved • Portrait paintings • Wealthy patrons wanted to be remembered • Autobiographies • Written equivalents of self-portraits • It seems the Renaissance, rightfully or wrongfully, went hand in hand with the development of the ego.

  20. Classical Learning • Scholars despised Renaissance works • Petrarch coined the phrase “Dark Ages” • Since the fall of Rome in 476 people had been living in “Darkness” • Scholars and many Renaissance figures were humanists • Studying what every human should know, Greek and Roman writing • The carrying on of tradition (evolution)

  21. Worldly Pleasures • Almost everyone enjoyed the “better things” in life in Renaissance Italy • Clothing became so decorative it was gaudy • Perfumes • No longer did devout people have to dress the part • It was okay to worship God, and have the better things in life as well

  22. Differing Ideals • Striving to master every art • “Universal men” / “Renaissance men” • The Courtier – How to be successful

  23. The Ideal Man • The ideal man has a responsibility to be many things according to Castiglione • Strong, polite, witty, a good dancer, sing, etc. • Many men during the Renaissance claimed to be well skilled in all these things • Alberti’s third person account

  24. The Ideal Woman • The same as the ideal men except: • They were not supposed to seek fame or create art, only inspire it. • Although some made an attempt at greatness • Isabella d’Este • Caterina Sforza • Very few achieved it • Women were however far better educated than in the Middle Ages

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